We have received text from S. 4943: Outcomes-Based Financing (OBF) for Students Act. This bill was received on 2026-06-24, and currently has 2 cosponsors.
Here is a short summary of the bill:
The bill sets up a federal rules framework for
outcomes-based student financing
, sometimes called OBF products. These are arrangements where a student or borrower pays based on future income rather than through a traditional fixed loan payment.
Core rules for these financing products
The bill defines what counts as an OBF product and requires providers to structure them with consumer protections. Among other things, these products would:
-
Base required payments on the borrower’s income.
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Set payments at $0 when the borrower’s income is below a minimum threshold.
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Limit the borrower’s payment burden to no more than 20% of income.
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Prevent the obligation from growing in a way that increases the borrower’s required payments because of missed payments or similar triggers.
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End after a set period of time.
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End if the borrower dies or becomes disabled.
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Bar wage assignments, meaning providers could not directly take wages through that mechanism.
Disclosures, advertising, and consumer protections
The bill requires detailed disclosures and advertising rules so borrowers receive clearer information before entering into these agreements. It is intended to make the terms of these products more transparent and to reduce the risk of misleading marketing.
Tax treatment
The bill changes how certain parts of these arrangements are treated for tax purposes. It exempts some debt relief connected to these products from being counted as taxable income. It also treats certain payments under the agreements similarly to education loan interest for tax purposes.
Effects on other federal laws
The bill also makes related changes to several other areas of law, including:
-
Bankruptcy:
adjusting how these obligations are handled if a borrower files for bankruptcy.
-
Higher education law:
making conforming changes so these products fit into the broader student financing system.
-
Equal Credit Opportunity Act (ECOA):
adding rules relevant to how these products are offered and evaluated.
-
Credit reporting:
setting rules for how these obligations may appear on credit reports.
Limits on state regulation
The bill would also limit state laws in certain ways. It largely preempts state rules on usury and repayment limits for these products, meaning states would have less ability to apply their own interest-rate or repayment restrictions to OBF arrangements covered by the bill.
Relevant Companies
-
NRDS
— NerdWallet could be affected indirectly if the market for student financing products expands or changes due to new federal rules.
-
LC
— LendingClub could see indirect effects if lenders adjust product offerings, disclosures, or compliance practices for income-based financing.
-
UPST
— Upstart could be indirectly impacted by changes in underwriting and consumer-credit rules related to alternative financing products.
-
SOFI
— SoFi could be affected if the bill changes how student financing products are structured, marketed, or reported.
-
CHEX
— Chegg could be indirectly impacted if financing options for education and student-related services are affected by the new framework.
Senator Todd Young Bill Proposals
Here are some bills which have recently been proposed by Senator Todd Young:
- S.4943: Outcomes-Based Financing (OBF) for Students Act
- S.4770: Web of Biological Data Act of 2026
- S.4751: End Tuberculosis Now Act of 2026
- S.4657: Modern, Clean, and Safe Trucks Act of 2026
- S.4653: A bill to amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to allow a deduction for loan interest payments made with respect to certain vehicles.
- S.4629: Government Bailout Prevention Act
You can track bills proposed by Senator Todd Young on Quiver Quantitative's politician page for Young.
Senator Todd Young Net Worth
Quiver Quantitative estimates that Senator Todd Young is worth $91.0K, as of July 13th, 2026. This is the 463rd highest net worth in Congress, per our live estimates.
Young has approximately $0 invested in publicly traded assets which Quiver is able to track live.
You can track Senator Todd Young's net worth on Quiver Quantitative's politician page for Young.
2028 Indiana US Senate Election
There has been approximately $9,647,209 of spending in Indiana US Senate elections over the last two years, per our estimates.
Approximately $639,625 of this has been from outside spending by PACs and Super PACs. Some of the groups who are spending money in this race include:
You can track this election on our matchup page for the 2028 Indiana US Senate election.
This article is not financial advice. See Quiver Quantitative's disclaimers for more information.
Read full article here »
New Bill: Senator Todd Young introduces S. 4943: Outcomes-Based Financing (OBF) for Students Act
We have received text from S. 4943: Outcomes-Based Financing (OBF) for Students Act. This bill was received on 2026-06-24, and currently has 2 cosponsors.
Here is a short summary of the bill:
The bill sets up a federal rules framework for outcomes-based student financing , sometimes called OBF products. These are arrangements where a student or borrower pays based on future income rather than through a traditional fixed loan payment.
Core rules for these financing products
The bill defines what counts as an OBF product and requires providers to structure them with consumer protections. Among other things, these products would:
Disclosures, advertising, and consumer protections
The bill requires detailed disclosures and advertising rules so borrowers receive clearer information before entering into these agreements. It is intended to make the terms of these products more transparent and to reduce the risk of misleading marketing.
Tax treatment
The bill changes how certain parts of these arrangements are treated for tax purposes. It exempts some debt relief connected to these products from being counted as taxable income. It also treats certain payments under the agreements similarly to education loan interest for tax purposes.
Effects on other federal laws
The bill also makes related changes to several other areas of law, including:
Limits on state regulation
The bill would also limit state laws in certain ways. It largely preempts state rules on usury and repayment limits for these products, meaning states would have less ability to apply their own interest-rate or repayment restrictions to OBF arrangements covered by the bill.
Relevant Companies
Senator Todd Young Bill Proposals
Here are some bills which have recently been proposed by Senator Todd Young:
You can track bills proposed by Senator Todd Young on Quiver Quantitative's politician page for Young.
Senator Todd Young Net Worth
Quiver Quantitative estimates that Senator Todd Young is worth $91.0K, as of July 13th, 2026. This is the 463rd highest net worth in Congress, per our live estimates.
Young has approximately $0 invested in publicly traded assets which Quiver is able to track live.
You can track Senator Todd Young's net worth on Quiver Quantitative's politician page for Young.
2028 Indiana US Senate Election
There has been approximately $9,647,209 of spending in Indiana US Senate elections over the last two years, per our estimates.
Approximately $639,625 of this has been from outside spending by PACs and Super PACs. Some of the groups who are spending money in this race include:
You can track this election on our matchup page for the 2028 Indiana US Senate election.
This article is not financial advice. See Quiver Quantitative's disclaimers for more information.
Read full article here »